John Adamson is a Fellow of Peterhouse, University of Cambridge. He is the author of The Noble Revolt: the Overthrow of Charles I.

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Houriya Ahmed is a research fellow at the Centre for Social Cohesion and co-author of Hizb ut-Tahrir: Ideology and Strategy. Read more

Robin Aitken is a former BBC journalist and published Can We Trust the BBC? after more than 25 years of service.

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Edward Alexander is emeritus professor of English at University of Washington in Seattle. He is the author of is The Jewish Divide Over Israel: Accusers and Defenders (co-edited with Paul Bogdanor).

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Ellen Alpsten was born and grew up in Kenya. After working as a producer and a presenter on Bloomberg TV, she is now a full-time writer.

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Louis Amis is a staff writer at Standpoint.

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Topaz Amoore is a former foreign editor of the Daily Telegraph.  She lives in Rome.

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Gerard Baker is US editor and an assistant editor at the Times. He writes from Washington about America politics, economics and society for the Times as well as for a number of other publications.

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Shmuel Bar is Director of Studies at the Institute of Policy and Strategy in Herzlia, Israel, and an adjunct Senior Fellow at the Hudson Institute, New York. He is the author of Warrant for Terror. Read more
Jeremy Hugh Baron trained as a physician and scientist in Oxford, London and New York, and has honorary posts in the medical schools of Imperial College and Mount Sinai. His latest book is Anglo-American Biomedical Antecedents of Nazi Crimes. Read more

Jonathan Bate is a critic, biographer, Shakespeare scholar and professor at the University of Warwick.

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Bruce Bawer is an American writer, poet and critic who lives in Norway. He is the author of several books, including While Europe Slept: How Radical Islam Is Destroying the West from Within.

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Daniel Beresford is a graduate of Oxford Brookes University.

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John Bew is a Harris Fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge, and a lecuturer of modern British history. He is the author of Talking to Terrorists, co-written with Martyn Frampton and Iñigo Gurruchaga.

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Nigel Biggar is Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology at Oxford, a member of the Royal College of Physicians' Committee on Ethical Issues in Medicine, and author of Aiming to Kill: The Ethics of Suicide and Euthanasia. Read more
Julie Bindel is a journalist and feminist campaigner. She is co-editor of The Map of My Life: The Story of Emma Humphreys. Read more

Conrad Black is an author, columnist, and investor. He is the author of Richard M. Nixon: A Life in Full and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Champion of Freedom.

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Jeremy Black is Professor of History at the University of Exeter. He is the author of many books, including The Curse of History and Geopolitics. Read more

Georgina Blackwell is a graduate of St. Edmund Hall, Oxford.

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Tim Blanning is Professor of Modern European History at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of many books, including The Triumph of Music in the Modern World.

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Hazel Blears is the Labour MP for Salford, and Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government.

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Peter Blegvad is a writer, musician and cartoonist. He teaches Creative Writing at Wawick University. Read more

Jerald J. Block is a psychiatrist in a private practice in Portland, Oregon. He teaches at Oregon Health & Science where he is a pioneer in the field of Pathological Computer Use and has also written on school shootings.

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The presidential adviser and author of Terror and Consent, Philip Bobbitt, shares his ideas on the war on terror in a Standpoint dialogue with Conservative politician and author of Celsius 7/7, Michael Gove.

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John R. Bolton is the former US ambassador to the United Nations. He is now senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and the author of Surrender is Not an Option: Defending America at the United Nations.

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Philip Booth is Editorial and Programme Director of the Institute of Economic Affairs and editor of Pension Provision: Government Failure Around the World. He is Professor of Insurance and Risk Management at Cass Business School.

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Ian Bostridge is one of the world's most celebrated operatic and concert tenors. An honorary fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, he is the author of Witchcraft and its Transformations. He is on the Advisory Board of Standpoint.

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The tenor Ian Bostridge and the historian Tim Blanning discuss popular and classical music with Standpoint editor Daniel Johnson.

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Bruce Boucher is the author of Andrea Palladio: The Architect in His Time. He was a professor of the history of art for many years at University College London and is director of the art museum of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.

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Sidney Brichto was a British rabbi, and Senior Vice-President of the Liberal Jewish Movement. He published a series of new translations of what was called the People's Bible, and is the author of Funny,You Don't Look Jewish...

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Samuel Brittan and Edward Hadas, both distinguished economic commentators, discuss where to place the blame for the current global crisis with Standpoint editor Daniel Johnson.

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Craig Brown is one of Britain's leading satirists. He writes columns for the Daily Telegraph and Private Eye and is chief book reviewer for the Mail on Sunday. His books include The Tony Years and The Marsh-Marlowe Letters.

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Alan Brownjohn is a poet and novelist. His latest novel, Windows on the Moon (Black Spring), comes out in paperback next month. Read more

Julie Burchill is a writer and columnist, and a Christian Zionist. She is the author of Not in My Name: A compendium of Modern Hypocrisy, written with Chas Newkey-Burden, and Made in Brighton (Virgin Books), co-written by Daniel Raven.

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Michael Burleigh is a historian and the author of 10 books. These include The Third Reich: a New History, Earthly Powers, Sacred Causes and Blood & Rage: A Cultural History of Terrorism. He is on the Advisory Board of Standpoint.

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Matthew Carr is a portrait artist working in monochrome charcoal and conté pencil. He is working towards an exhibition next year at Marlborough Fine Art. Read more

Lesley Chamberlain is a journalist, travel writer, and historian of Russian and German culture. She is the author of The Philosophy Steamer: Lenin and the Exile of the Intelligentsia.

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Alexander Chancellor is a Guardian columnist. He was formerly Editor of the Spectator, and spent a year working as an editor at The New Yorker.

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Robert Chandler is a poet and translator of the works of Vasily Grossman and Andrey Platanov.

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Jessie Childs is a biographer and historian, and the author of Henry VIII's Last Victim: The Life and Times of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey.

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James Clasper is a former New York City lawyer, and is now a freelance writer and editor based in London. He has written for the Daily Telegraph, New Statesman, and the Liberal.

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Alice Cockerell is a freelance journalist.

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Nick Cohen is a columnist for the Observer. He is the author of Pretty Straight Guys, What's Left?, and Waiting for the Etonians. For more information and his previous blog, visit nickcohen.net

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Tim Congdon is an economist. He is a former adviser to the Treasury, and the founder of Lombard Street Research. He is the author of Keynes, the Keynesians and Monetarism.

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Robert Conquest is a historian, poet and political philosopher. He was described at the final plenum of the Soviet Communist Party as ‘anti-Sovietchik No. 1', and is the author of the classic work The Great Terror.

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John Cottingham is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Reading and an Honorary Fellow of St John's College, Oxford. His recent books include On the Meaning of Life, The Spiritual Dimension and Cartesian Reflections.

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Con Coughlin is the Daily Telegraph's executive foreign editor. He is an expert on the Middle East and Islamic terrorism, and the author of Khomeini's Ghost: The Iranian Revolution and the Rise of Militant Islam.

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Hugh Curtiss was a monk for several years in the 1960s and '70s before leaving to be a farm labourer. He is now a spiritual and business consultant.

 

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Anthony Daniels worked for many years as a prison doctor. His books, as Theodore Dalrymple, include In Praise of Prejudice: The Necessity of Preconceived Ideas.

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The author Anthony Daniels and the antiquarian bookseller Christopher Edwards write about the joys of browsing second-hand bookshops, and what life is like selling antiquarian books.  

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Max Davidson is a critic, novelist and travel writer. He writes mainly for the Daily Telegraph and has been, at various times, a TV critic, restaurant critic and parliamentary sketch-writer.

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Dr Christie Davies is the author of The Mirth of Nations, co-author of Esuniku Joku and author of the academic study of humour, Jokes and Targets. He also wrote the collection of humorous magical science fiction stories Dewi the Dragon.

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Jan Davies is the author of The Criminal Advocate's Survival Guide.

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Tamasin Day-Lewis writes a weekly food column for the Daily Telegraph. Her latest book is a memoir, Where Shall We Go For Dinner? Read more

Alain de Botton is a writer and philosopher. He is the author of A Song for Occupations, The Architecture of Happiness, and How Proust Can Change your Life. He wrote a monthly column, Utopia, for Standpoint until the end of 2008.

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Midge Decter's work has appeared in numerous magazines, among them Commentary and National Review. She is the author of several books, the most recent of which is Rumsfeld, A Personal Portrait.

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James Delingpole is the author of How To Be Right and Coward On The Beach. He writes for the Times, the Daily Telegraph, and the Spectator.

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Mara Delius writes for the culture section of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. She has a doctorate in German Literature from King's College, London.

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Jessica Duchen is a music journalist and the author of four novels, two biographies and several stage works. She writes regularly for The Independent and BBC Music Magazine. Her latest novel, Songs of Triumphant Love, is published by Hodder.

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Myron Ebell is Director of Global Warming and International Environmental Policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, and Chairman of the Cooler Heads Coalition, which aims to dispel myths about global warming.

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Christopher Edwards is an antiquarian bookseller living in Oxfordshire.

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David Ekserdjian is Professor of History of Art and Film at the University of Leicester, and is a Trustee of the National Gallery and of Tate.

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James Elliott is an anglo-american writer.

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Joseph Epstein is an essayist, short story writer, and editor. He is the former Editor of The American Scolar, and is Contributing Editor at The Weekly Standard. His new collection, The Love Song of A. Jerome Minkoff and Other Stories, is to be published this year. 

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Richard Eyre was director of the National Theatre from 1987 to1997. His films include The Ploughman's Lunch, Iris, Stage Beauty, Notes on a Scandal and The Other Man.

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Mark Falcoff is a policy consultant and expert on Latin American affairs. He is resident scholar emeritus at the American Enterprise Institute.

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Nicholas Fearn writes for the Spectator, the New Statesman, the Independent on Sunday, and the Financial Times. He is the author of Philosophy: The Latest Answers to the Oldest Questions.

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Niall Ferguson is the Laurence A. Tisch Professor of History at Harvard University, and his books include Colossus: The Rise and Fall of the American Empire, and The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World.

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Frank Field has been Labour MP for Birkenhead for thirty years. He has published a pamphlet with Civitas called Welfare Titans, and is on the Advisory Board of Standpoint.

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Tibor Fischer is a British novelist and short story writer. He is the author of Under the Frog, which was shortlisted for the Booker prize, and Good to be God.

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Focus on Islamism is a blog dedicated to analysing and exposing the modern ideological phenomenon known as Islamism.

Shiraz Maher is a writer and broadcaster.

Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens is a research fellow for Westminster based think tank, the Centre for Social Cohesion.  He has contributed to various online and printed publications including, The Daily Telegraph, Lebanon's Daily Star, Standpoint and NOWLebanon. 

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Jonathan Foreman is an Anglo-American journalist and film critic. He was film critic for the New York Post and has written for, among many, The New Yorker, The National Review, and the Daily Telegraph. He is Standpoint's Writer-at-Large.

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Roy Foster is Carroll Professor of Irish History at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Hertford College. He is the author of Luck and the Irish: a brief history of change 1970-2000.

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Marianne Fox Ockinga is a Dutch-born artist who works in watercolour, pastel and woodblock printing. She lives in London and has been commissioned to record the development of the 2012 Olympics site. Read more

Steve Fuller is Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick. He is the author of 15 books, including Dissent over Descent: Intelligent Design's Challenge to Darwinism.

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Timothy Fuller is a professor at Colorado College. He is co-editor, with Shirley Letwin, of the Selected Works of Michael Oakeshott. Read more

Sir Martin Gilbert is the author of many books, including Israel: A History, and Churchill and the Jews. His Atlas of the Arab-Israel Conflict is now in its ninth edition. In June, he was appointed a member of the Iraq War inquiry.

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Victoria Glendinning is a biographer and novelist. Among her biographies is Jonathan Swift, and Leonard Woolf and she is the author of Love's Civil War, an edition of the love-letters and diaries of Elizabeth Bowen and Charles Ritchie.

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Edward Bernard Glick is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Temple University in Philadelphia, USA.

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Stephen Glover is a former editor of the Independent on Sunday, and a columnist for the Daily Mail and the Independent.

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Richard Godwin is a columnist for the London Evening Standard, where he is also deputy arts editor. Read more

Jonah Goldberg is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times and contributing editor to National Review. A former columnist for The Times, he has also written for The New Yorker, USA Today, Commentary, and the Wall Street Journal.

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Angelica Goodden is a Fellow of St Hilda's College, Oxford. Her books include biographies of Angelica Kauffmann, Elizabeth-Louise Vigee-Le-Brun and Germaine de Staël.

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Paul Goodman is the Conservative MP for Wycombe, and a Shadow Minister of the Department for Communities and Local Government.

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Professor Rüdiger Görner is the Head of the School of Languages, Linguistics and Film and Director of the Centre for Anglo-German Cultural Relations at Queen Mary, University of London. He is the author of many works on German literature.

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Michael Gove MP is Shadow Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families. He is the author of Celsius 7/7, and is on the Advisory Board of Standpoint.

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The playwright Simon Gray died on August 7. Shortly before his death he shared his thoughts on the theatre and much else in a Standpoint Dialogue with The Daily Telegraph's theatre critic Charles Spencer and our editor Daniel Johnson.

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John Gross is a former editor of the TLS. He is the author of The New Oxford Book of Literary Anecdotes.

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Miriam Gross was formerly books and arts editor of the Sunday Telegraph.

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Fisun Güner writes arts features and reviews for the New Statesman, Metro and the arts website www.theartsdesk.com Read more

William Hague is the Shadow Foreign Secretary and MP for Richmond.

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Tara Hamilton-Miller is a freelance journalist and former Conservative Party press officer.

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Michael Hanlon is science editor of the Daily Mail and a contributor to the New Scientist. He is the author of Eternity: Our Next Billion Years.

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The political columnist Bruce Anderson and Robin Harris, former Director of the Conservative Research Department and long-standing adviser to Lady Thatcher, debate David Cameron's Thatcherite credentials.

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Selina Hastings was assistant Literary Editor of the Daily Telegraph for 14 years, and has written biographies of Nancy Mitford, Evelyn Waugh, Rosamond Lehmann, and Somerset Maugham.

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Nigel Hawkes has been Science Editor of the Observer and The Times. He is director of the pressure group Straight Statistics (straightstatistics.org). Read more

Simon Heffer is Associate Editor of, and a columnist for, the Daily Telegraph. He has written books about Enoch Powell, Edward VII and England's relations with Scotland.

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Michael Heller is a cosmologist who was awarded the 2008 Templeton Prize. A Catholic priest, he holds a chair at the Pontifical Academy of Theology in Kraków, Poland, and is an adjunct member of the Vatican Observatory staff.

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Patrick Heren is a journalist who specialises in competitive energy markets. He is the founder of Heren Energy (now ICIS Heren).

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Judith Herrin is Professor of Late Antique and Byzantine Studies at Kings' College London. She is the author of Byzantium: The Surprising Life of a Medieval Empire.

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James Hickling is a graduate of Nottingham University.

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Susan Hill is a writer, playwright, and literary critic. Her novels have been translated into many languages and have won the Whitbread and Somerset Maugham awards, and been shortlisted for the Booker Prize.

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Gertrude Himmelfarb is an American historian and author. She is a Fellow of the British Academy and in 2004 received the National Humanities Medal awarded by the President. She is on the Advisory Board of Standpoint.

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Peter Hitchens is a columnist on the Mail on Sunday and author of The Broken Compass: How British Politics Lost Its Way. Read more

Marko Attila Hoare is a British historian of the former Yugoslavia. He is a Senior Research Fellow at Kingston University, London, and the European Neighbourhood Section Director of the Henry Jackson Society.

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Nichi Hodgson is an Editorial Assistant at the Law Society, a regular contributor to the Erotic Review, and a freelance writer on arts, culture and sexuality Read more

Simon Hoggart, a former presenter of the News Quiz, is the Guardian's parliamentary sketchwriter and television critic for the Spectator.

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Karen Horn is an economist, author and director of the Berlin office of the Institut der deutschen Wirtschaft, an economic research institute.

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William Horsley was a BBC correspondent in Germany following the fall of the Berlin Wall and is currently international director of the Centre for Freedom of the Media at the University of Sheffield.

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Michael Howard is a British military historian and was Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford. He is the author of Grand Strategy. Vol. IV of the UK Official History of the Second World War.

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Kathryn Hughes is Professor in the School of Literature and Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. She is the author of The Short Life and Long Times of Mrs Beeton.

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Katie Ivens is vice-chairman of the parents' organisation, the Campaign for Real Education, and education director of literacy charity Real Action.

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Pico Iyer is an essayist and novelist. His book, The Open Road, is an account of 33 years of travelling and talking with the 14th Dalai Lama. He lives in Japan.

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Julian Jackson is Professor of History at Queen Mary University, London. He is the author of The Fall of France and France: The Dark Years 1940-44. His most recent book is Living in Arcadia: Homosexuality, Politics and Morality in France from the Liberation to Aids. Read more

Gerald Jacobs is Literary Editor of the Jewish Chronicle and the author of Sacred Games.

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Dan Jacobson was born and grew up in South Africa. He is Professor Emeritus at University College London, and is the author of All For Love.

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Clive James is an expatriate Australian author, poet, and critic. His published works include Cultural Amnesia: Notes in the Margin of My Time, and Opal Sunset, a volume of selected poems. His website is CliveJames.com.

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Jeremy Jennings is Professor of Political Theory at Queen Mary University of London. He is presently writing a history of French political thought, and is the author of Georges Sorel: the Character and Development of his Thought.

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Siv Jensen is the leader of Norway's Progress Party. In an interview with Standpoint editor Daniel Johnson, she explains her views. The American writer Bruce Bawer explains the background to her meteoric career.

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Daniel Johnson is the Editor of Standpoint.

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Paul Johnson was Editor of the New Statesman from 1965-1970. His many works of history include The Birth of the Modern: World Society 1815-1830 as well as the trilogy Intellectuals, Creators and Heroes.

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R.W. Johnson is a journalist and historian. He is South Africa correspondent for the Sunday Times. He was a South African Rhodes Scholar and was a fellow in politics at Magdalen College, Oxford.

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Luke Johnson, entrepreneur and business commentator, discusses terrorism's growing menace with historian Michael Burleigh and Standpoint editor Daniel Johnson.

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Edith Johnson is a student in London and a member of the National Youth Theatre.

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Rick Jones is a journalist who writes on the arts for the New Statesman and other publications. He studied under WG Sebald at the University of East Anglia.

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Nigel Jones is a journalist, historian and biographer. He is the author of Countdown to Valkyrie: the July Plot to assassinate Hitler, with an afterword by Count Berthold von Stauffenberg.

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Ben Judah has reported from the Middle East and the Caucasus for ISN Security Watch, Economist Online and the New Republic Online.

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Alan Judd is a former soldier and diplomat, and the biographer of Ford Madox Ford and Mansfield Cumming, founder of MI6. He is the author of Dancing with Eva.

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Oliver Kamm is a leader writer and columnist for the Times. He is the author of Anti-Totalitarianism: The Left-wing Case for a Neoconservative Foreign Policy.

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Masha Karp is a Russian-born London-based freelance journalist. Read more

Travis Kavulla, a former associate editor of National Review, is a Gates Scholar in History at Cambridge University, a 2008 Phillips Foundation journalism fellow, and a recent graduate of Harvard.

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Terence Kealey is the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Buckingham and the author of Sex, Science and Profits. Read more

Julian Keeling is a freelance journalist and a counsellor of addiction sufferers.

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Gary Kent is a writer who visited Iraqi Kurdistan with the UK all-party parliamentary group on the region.

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Björn Kern has written three novels based on his experience working with mentally disabled and elderly people in France. He lives in Berlin.

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Roy Kerridge is a journalist and author who has written for Prospect, The Salisbury Review, and the Spectator.

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Roger Kimball is co-editor and co-publisher of The New Criterion magazine and the publisher of Encounter Books.

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James Kirchick is an American journalist and political commentator. He is an assistant editor at the New Republic and a contributor to the Los Angeles Times.

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David Kynaston is an English historian and the author of Austerity Britain: 1945-1951.

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Walter Laqueur is the author of Terrorism (first published in 1977) and Guerrilla (1976), which are among the leading texts in this field and have been translated into many languages. Read more

Nigel Lawson is a Conservative politician and former Chancellor of the Exchequer. His latest book is An Appeal to Reason, and he is on the Advisory Board of Standpoint.

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Former Tory chancellor Nigel Lawson challenges David Cameron’s Conservatives and their global warming policies, whilst the party’s policy chief Oliver Letwin defends them. 

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Dominic Lawson is a colomnist for the Sunday Times and the Independent. Read more
Ruth Lea is economic adviser to the Arbuthnot Banking Group and a Vice-President of the National Churches Trust. Read more

Rodney Leach is the Director of Jardine Matheson Group and chairman of Open Europe. He is the author of Europe, A Concise Encyclopedia, and was made a life peer in 2006.

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Adam LeBor is a British author and journalist based in Budapest. He reports from Central Europe for The Times and is the author of City of Oranges.

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Oliver Letwin MP chairs the Conservative Research Department and the party's Policy Review. Read more

Angela Levin is a journalist and broadcaster who writes chiefly for the Mail on Sunday. She is the author of Loving Peter, a memoir of Peter Cook.

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Davis Lewin is a Senior Resident Fellow at The Henry Jackson Society.

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Francesca Lewis is a graduate of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and the London School of Economics. Read more

Sophie Lewis manages the Europe office of Dalkey Archive Press in London. Her translation of Stendhal's De l'Amour is published by Hesperus.

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Joseph Loconte is a senior research fellow at The King's College in New York. He is the editor of The End of Illusions: Religious Leaders Confront Hitler's Gathering Storm.

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Robert Low is Consultant Editor at Standpoint.

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Anthony Loyd has been a special correspondent for The Times for 15 years. He has been a frequent visitor to Afghanistan since 1996.

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Edward Lucas is the author of The New Cold War: how the Kremlin threatens both Russia and the West. He is the Central and Eastern Europe correspondent of The Economist, and has reported on the region for more than 20 years.

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Edward Lucas and Mary Dejevsky, both leading commentators on Russia and eastern Europe, discuss the Georgian crisis and its implications for the West. Read more

Giles MacDonogh has written for the Financial Times, the Guardian, and the Times. He is the author of After the Reich: from the Fall of Vienna to the Berlin Airlift.

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James MacMillan is a Scottish composer. Forthcoming projects include a new Violin Concerto written for Vadim Repin and performances of his St John Passion with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and London Symphony Orchesta. Read more

Denis MacShane is Labour MP for Rotherham.

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Shiraz Maher is a writer and broadcaster.

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Noel Malcolm is a Senior Research Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford, and the author of Kosovo: A Short History, and Aspects of Hobbes. He is on the Advisory Board of Standpoint.

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Kate Maltby blogs at nazg.com/iqrai

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Jessica Mann is a crime-writer and journalist. She is the author of Deadlier Than the Male.

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Philip Mansel's books include a life of Louis XVIII and a history of Paris after 1814. He is editor of the Court Historian, journal of the society for Court Studies.

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Jonathan Margolis is a journalist and author. He has written biographies of John Cleese and Bernard Manning.

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Ann Marlowe is an American critic and journalist who writes for the Wall Street Journal and New York Post. She is the author of How to Stop Time: Heroin from A to Z and has an interest in Afghanistan.

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Justin Marozzi is a travel writer, historian, journalist and political risk and security consultant. He is the author of The Man Who Invented History: Travels with Herodotus and writes for the Financial Times, Spectator, Guardian, and Prospect.

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Andrew Marr is a BBC broadcaster and the author of A History of Modern Britain. He hosts The Andrew Marr Show on BBC One and presents Radio 4's Start The Week.

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Minette Marrin is a columnist for the Sunday Times, as well as a broadcaster and fiction writer.

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Philip Marsden is an English travel writer and novelist. He is the author of The Barefoot Emperor; An Ethiopian Tragedy. He lives in Cornwall and is currently writing a book about the sea.

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Barry Martin is the Artist-in-Residence at Chiswick House, London. His works hang in the Tate, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Portrait Gallery. His new exhibition, The Discerning Eye, is at the Mall Galleries. Read more

Allan Massie has written some twenty novels and a number of non-fiction books, including The Thistle and the Rose, a study of Anglo-Scottish relations. He writes a fortnightly column, "Life & Letters", for the Spectator.

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Derwent May was literary editor of The Listener and the Sunday Telegraph. He is the author of books on Proust and Hannah Arendt, and of Critical Times: The History of the Times Literary Supplement.

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Jenny McCartney is the film critic and a columnist at the Sunday Telegraph.

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Melanie McDonagh is an Irish journalist based in London and a leader-writer for the London Evening Standard.

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Anne McElvoy is Executive Editor of the London Evening Standard. She was made Deputy Editor of the Spectator in 1996 and Associate Editor of the Independent in 1998. She has published two books on Germany.

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John McEwen is an art critic and the author of Paula Rego: Behind the Scenes. Read more

Max McGuinness is a columnist and blogger for The Dubliner magazine. He also writes for the Irish Times, GQ, and Magill. He directed his own play, Up The Republic!, at the 2008 Edinburgh Festival.

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Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens is a research fellow for the Westminster-based Centre for Social Cohesion. He has contributed to various publications including the Daily Telegraph, Lebanon's Daily Star, and NOWLebanon.

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Robert Messenger was one of the founding editors of the New York Sun. He writes on books and culture for US publications. Read more

Lucasta Miller works for the Guardian, and is the author of The Brontë Myth.

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Kenneth Minogue taught at the LSE for some 40 years, and is Emeritus Professor of Political Science. He is the author of The Moral Life and the Democratic Revolution.

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Jonathan Mirsky was the China Correspondent of The Observer and East Asia editor of the Times. In 1989 he was named International Reporter of the Year for his dispatches from Tiananmen.

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Ray Monk is Professor of Philosophy at the Centre for Post-Analytic Philosophy at the University of Southampton. He is the author of Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius and a biography of Bertrand Russell.

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Jung Chang and her husband Jon Halliday are leading authorities on Mao, while Simon Sebag Montefiore has published two major works on Stalin.

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Charles Moore is a columnist of the Daily Telegraph and the Spectator, and the former Editor of both publications, as well as the former Editor of the Sunday Telegraph. He is engaged in writing the authorised biography of Margaret Thatcher.

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Caroline Moore is a writer and reviewer, and has written for the Spectator and the Daily Telegraph.

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Charles Moore is a columnist for, and former editor of, the Daily Telegraph. Sir Christopher Bland was Chairman of the BBC from 1996-2001, and has been Chairman of BT and London Weekend Television. Read more

Caroline Moorehead is the biographer of Bertrand Russell, Freya Stark, Iris Origo and Martha Gellhorn. She has also published a history of the Red Cross and a book about refugees, Human Cargo.

 

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Loanna Morrison is a Conservative parliamentary candidate. Formerly a Sunday Express journalist and Voice columnist, she has just completed a political science degree. Read more

Michael Mosbacher is Director of the Social Affairs Unit and Managing Editor of Standpoint.

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Nicholas Mosley has published two volumes of biography of his father, Oswald Mosley, and has written many novels. He discusses the rise and fall of British fascism with Sir Raymond Carr, the leading Spanish historian.

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Ferdinand Mount is a writer, novelist, and Conservative politician. He is the author of Cold Cream, and a former Editor of the TLS.

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Harry Mount is a writer, journalist, and former barrister. He is the author of A Lust for Window Sills - a Lover's Guide to British Buildings from Portcullis to Pebble-Dash.

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Dambisa Moyo, Zambian-born economist and author of Dead Aid, discusses foreign aid with Richard Dowden, executive director of the Royal African Society.

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Douglas Murray is the Director of the Centre for Social Cohesion. He is the author of Neoconservatism: Why We Need It, and co-author of Victims of Intimidation: Freedom of Speech within Muslim communities.

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Charles Murray is the W.H. Brady Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington DC. He is the author of Real Education: Four Simple Truths for Bringing America's Schools Back to Reality.

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Michael Nazir-Ali was the Bishop of Rochester until last September. He is the author of numerous books and articles on religion, including Conviction and Conflict: Islam, Christianity and World Order. He devotes himself to defending persecuted Christians.

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Vanessa Neumann is a writer. She was Assistant to the Minister Counselor for Petroleum and Economic Affairs at the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington, DC, and has a doctorate from Columbia University.

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Pamela Neville-Sington is the author of Fanny Trollope: The Life and Adventures of a Clever Woman and Robert Browning: A Life After Death.

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Aidan Nichols is a Dominican friar of the Priory of St Michael the Archangel, Cambridge. He is John Paul II Memorial Visiting Lecturer at the University of Oxford and Fellow of Greyfriars, Oxford.

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Archbishop Vincent Nichols is the Archbishop of Westminster, President of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales and spokesman for the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales. He was formerly Archbishop of Birmingham. Read more

Jay Nordlinger is a senior editor at National Review.

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John O'Sullivan is Executive Editor of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty in Prague and a Senior Fellow of the Hudson Institute in Washington. Read more

Cristina Odone is a former Editor of the Catholic Herald who broadcasts regularly on religious and ethical issues. She is a research fellow of the Centre for Policy Studies, and is the author of The Dilemmas of Harriet Carew.

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Bijan Omrani is a writer and journalist, and has written for the Spectator. He is the author of two guides to Afghanistan and Iran.

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Eric Ormsby is a poet and scholar. He is Professor and Chief Librarian at the Institute of Ismaili Studies, and the author of Ghazali: The Revival of Islam. His many volumes of poetry include Time's Covenant.

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George Osborne is MP for Tatton and the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer.

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Emanuele Ottolenghi is Director of the Transatlantic Institute in Brussels.

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Geoffrey Owen is a former editor of the Financial Times. He is the author of From Empire to Europe: The Decline and Revival of British Industry Since the Second World War.

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Cynthia Ozick's novels include the The Puttermesser Papers and Heir to the Glimmering World, published in Britain as The Bear Boy. She is the author of a collection of essays entitled The Din in the Head.

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Alasdair Palmer is public policy editor of the Sunday Telegraph and has worked as a Producer on films for HBO.

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Orhan Pamuk is Turkey's best-known novelist. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2006. He is the author of Snow and his latest novel, The Museum of Innocence, is out in September.

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Allison Pearson is an award-winning author, journalist and broadcaster. She is the Wednesday columnist of the Daily Mail and the bestselling author of I Don't Know How She Does It.

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Julia Pettengill is an Associate Fellow at the Henry Jackson Society. Read more

Harry Phibbs is a journalist and local councillor representing the Ravenscourt Park Ward on Hammersmith and Fulham Council. He is Editor of ConservativeHome's local government section.

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Melanie Phillips is a columnist for the Daily Mail and Jewish Chronicle, and a regular panellist on BBC Radio Four's Moral Maze. She is the author of Londonistan, a study of Britain's failure to deal with radical Islamism.

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‘The post-1989 temptation in Prague has been two-fold. The first has been to legislate the totalitarian past out of existence, the second has been to copy the liberal West blindly at a lag of 20 years’ Read more

Simon Scott Plummer is a freelance journalist and former leader writer on the Daily Telegraph.

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The Point is Standpoint's staff blog.

Jonathan Foreman is an Anglo-American journalist. He is Standpoint's Writer-at-Large and a film critic for the Jewish Chronicle.

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Nidra Poller is an American novelist and journalist who has lived in Paris since 1972. Her work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, City Journal and National Post.

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Peter Porter's latest poetry collection is Better Than God. Read more

John Preston is the TV critic of the Sunday Telegraph. His latest novel is The Dig.

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A.W. Price is the author of Love and Friendship in Plato and Aristotle, Mental Conflict, and Contextuality in Practical Reason.

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Munro Price is Professor of Modern History at Bradford University. He is the author of The Perilous Crown: France Between Revolutions.

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Michael Prodger is Literary Editor of the Sunday Telegraph.

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David Pryce-Jones is a Senior Editor of National Review. He was Literary Editor of the Financial Times and the Spectator, and is the author of Betrayal: France, the Arabs and the Jews.

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David Quinn is a columnist with the Irish Independent. He has written for the Wall Street Journal, Sunday Telegraph and National Review. He was previously a columnist for the Sunday Times, and is a former editor of the Irish Catholic.

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Frederic Raphael is a screenwriter, novelist, and journalist. He worked with Stanley Kubrick on his final film, Eyes Wide Shut, and is the author of the trilogy The Glittering Prizes. He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1964

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Piers Paul Read is the author of reportage (Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors), history (The Templars), biography (Alec Guinness), collected journalism and fiction. His most recent novel is The Death of a Pope.

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Piers Paul Read is the author of reportage (Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors), history (The Templars), biography (Alec Guinness), collected journalism and fiction. David Heathcoat-Amory is the Conservative MP for Wells, and was a UK Parliamentary Representative to the Convention on the Future of Europe, which drafted the European Constitution.  Read more
Laurence Rees is a documentary filmmaker and historian. He is the author of World War II Behind Closed Doors: Stalin, the Nazis and the West. Read more

Annunziata Rees-Mogg is the Conservative Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Somerton and Frome.

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Aileen Reid is an historian on the Survey of London at English Heritage, and is curator of Emery Walker's house in Hammersmith.

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Andrew Roberts is a historian. He is the author of many books, including Masters and Commanders. He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and given an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters in 2001.

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Geoffrey Robertson QC is Head of Doughty Street Chambers and author of The Tyrannicide Brief and Crimes Against Humanity. Read more
Hamish Robinson was poet-in-residence of the Wordsworth Trust in 2005 and is the author of The Gift Returned. Read more

Mark Ronan is Honorary Professor of Mathematics at University College, London, and author of Symmetry and the Monster.

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Joshua Rozenberg was the BBC's legal correspondent for 15 years. He moved to The Daily Telegraph in 2000, editing the paper's legal coverage for eight years. Now a freelance writer, commentator and broadcaster on legal affairs, he blogs exclusively for Standpoint.

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Tobias Rüther's is the author of Helden. David Bowie und Berlin - an analysis of Bowie's years in Berlin and a cultural history of the city in the mid-1970s.

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Jonathan Sacks is Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth and has recently been appointed to the House of Lords. His latest book is Future Tense: A Vision for Jews and Judaism in the Global Culture. Read more

Razeen Sally is co-director of the European Centre for International Political Economy, and teaches at the LSE.

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Roger Sandall is an essayist and commentator on cultural relativism. He is the author of The Culture Cult: Designer Tribalism and Other Essays.

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Charles Saumarez Smith is Secretary and Chief Executive of the Royal Academy of Arts. A former director of the National Gallery and the National Portrait Gallery, he has recently published The National Gallery: A Short History. Read more

Victoria Schofield is a writer and commentator on South Asian politics. She has written several articles for The Spectator and is the author of  Bhutto: Trial and Execution and Afghan Frontier: Feuding and Fighting in Central Asia.

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Ingo Schulze is the leading German writer to emerge since 1989 from the former GDR. He has won several awards for his novels and stories. He is the author of Adam and Evelyn. Read more
Claudia Schwartz is a Research Assistant at the Legatum Institute. Read more

Professor Neil Scolding is the Burden Professor of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Bristol and Director of the Burden Neurological Institute. His research concentrates on developing and testing adult stem cell therapy.

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Dr David Scott is a Senior Research Fellow for the History of Parliament Trust.

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James Scott Linville is a film maker, journalist, and blogger, and a former co-editor of the Paris Review.

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Roger Scruton is a philosopher with a special interest in the aesthetics of music. He teaches at the Institute for the Psychological Sciences in Washington and Oxford and was founding Editor of the Salisbury Review.

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Ruth Scurr is a fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. She is the author of Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution.

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Francesca Segal has written for Granta, the Daily Telegraph, the Observer, the Financial Times and the Jewish Chronicle. She is currently a features writer at Tatler, and is the Observer's Debut Fiction columnist.

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Raymond Seitz was the U.S. Ambassador to the UK from 1991-94, and is the author of Over Here.

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David Sexton is Literary Editor of the London Evening Standard and has written for the Guardian and the First Post.

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JM Shaw is a writer, and the author of The Illumination of Merton Browne.

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Jane Shilling is a journalist and author of The Fox in the Cupboard: A Memoir and a book on middle age, The Stranger in the Mirror.

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James Shinn was US Assistant Secretary of Defense from 2007-8, with prime policy responsibility for Afghanistan. He previously served in the Central Intelligence Agency and the State Department, and teaches at Princeton University.

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Amity Shlaes won the International Policy Network's Bastiat Prize for Journalism in 2002 for her work in the Financial Times. She is the author of The Forgotten Man: a New History of the Great Depression.

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Ryan Shorthouse is Political Secretary of the Bow Group, a Conservative think-tank.

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Lionel Shriver is a journalist and author. She won the 2005 Orange Fiction Prize for her eighth published novel, We Need to Talk About Kevin. Read more

Marc Sidwell wrote Unfair Trade for the Adam Smith Institute. He has a forthcoming report for the Social Affairs Unit on religion and poverty: God Can Make You Rich.

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Robin Simcox is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Social Cohesion and Section Director for the Henry Jackson Society.

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Brendan Simms is Professor of the History of International Relations at the University of Cambridge, and author of Unfinest Hour: Britain and the Destruction of Bosnia.

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Rana Siu Inboden previously worked on humans rights at the US State Department.

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Lord Skidelsky, the biographer of Keynes, is Emeritus Professor of Political Economy at the University of Warwick. Tim Congdon is a former adviser to the Treasury and a founder of Lombard Street Research. Read more

Ed Smith is a former professional cricketer for Kent and Middlesex, who played three times for England. He is now a writer, and the author of What Sport Tells Us About Life.

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Lee Smith is a visiting fellow at the Hudson Institute where he specializes in Levant affairs.

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A new documentary made in Afghanistan has won two awards at the the Sundance Film Festival. Afghan Star could help the cause of feminism there and encourage a desperately-needed sense of national community Read more
Chloe Smith won the Norwich North by-election for the Conservatives in July. Read more

Fredric Smoler teaches Literature and History at Sarah Lawrence College and is a contributing editor of American Heritage.

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Charles Spencer has been theatre critic of the Daily Telegraph since 1991. He was named critic of the year at the British Press Awards in 1999 and 2008.

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Nick Spencer is the Director of Studies at Theos, a public theology think-tank.

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Daniel Johnson, Georgina Blackwell, Hannah Stone, Frances Weaver, Robert Low, Emily Read, and Miriam Gross.

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Peter Stanford is a biographer, columnist and former editor of the Catholic Herald. He is the author of C. Day-Lewis: A Life.

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Berenika Stefanska is a graduate of Pembroke College, Cambridge, and the School of Oriental and African Studies, London. Read more

Rick Stein is an English chef, restaurateur and television presenter.

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John Stein is a Professor of Neuroscience at Magdalen College, Oxford. His research focuses on the control of movement and behaviour in animals, neurological patients, dyslexics and young offenders.

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Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz has written more than 60 books, including acclaimed Talmudic translations and commentaries. He lives in Jerusalem. Read more

Hannah Stone is an editorial assistant at Standpoint.

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Tom Stoppard is a British playwright. He wrote, among others, The Coast of Utopia, Arcadia, Rosencratz and Guildenstern are Dead and Rock 'n' Roll. He is on the Advisory Board of Standpoint.

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Gisela Stuart has been the Labour MP for Birmingham Edgbaston since 1997. She is a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee and a trustee of the Henry Jackson Society.

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Barton Swaim works as a speechwriter. He is the author of Scottish Men of Letters and the New Public Sphere, 1802-1834.

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Helen Szamuely writes the Bruges Group blog and co-edits the EUReferendum blog.

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Amir Taheri writes for various magazines and newspapers about the Middle East, Islamist terrorism and the Iranian regime.

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Sean Thomas is the author of Absent Fathers, Kissing England, The Cheek Perforation Dance, and Millions of Women are Waiting to Meet You - a memoir of his chequered lovelife.

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Gina Thomas is the UK cultural correspondent of the Frankfurter Allgemeiner Zeitung.

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J.M.W. Thompson was Editor of the Sunday Telegraph, 1975-85. He lives on the North Norfolk coast.

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Anthony Thwaite is a poet and writer. He was formerly Literary Editor of the New Statesman and Editor of Encounter. His Collected Poems came out in 2007, and in 1992 he was awarded the OBE for services to poetry.

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Rebecca Tinsley is chair of the human rights organisation Waging Peace. She used to work with the BBC and has had two novels published. She is on the Human Rights Watch London committee and is a trustee of the Carter Centre UK.

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Michael J. Totten is a foreign correspondent and foreign policy analyst. His work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. He was named Blogger of the Year in 2006 by The Week magazine.

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William Tucker writes for the American Spectator and is the author of Terrestrial Energy: How Nuclear Power Will Lead the Green Revolution and End America's Energy Odyssey.

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Geza Vermes, Professor Emeritus of Jewish Studies at Oxford, is the leading authority on the Dead Sea Scrolls and author of many books on the life of Jesus, including The Resurrection: History and Myth.

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Sarah Vine is a journalist and author, and is a leader writer at The Times.

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Spike Vrusho is a journalist and taxi driver. He is the author of Benchclearing: Baseball's Greatest Fights and Riots and lives in Rhinebeck, New York.

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George Walden is a former diplomat and Conservative Minister, now a writer. His books include Who's a Dandy, God Won't Save America, Time To Emigrate, and China: A Wolf in the World?

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Celia Walden is a feature writer on the Daily Telegraph. Her first novel, Harm's Way, was published in 2009. Read more

Guy Walters is the author of Berlin Games - How Hitler Stole the Olympic Dream, and Hunting Evil, a history of how the Nazis escaped and were tracked down (or not).

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Keith Ward is a British cleric and scholar, and the author of many books, including The God Conclusion.

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Bryan Ward-Perkins is a lecturer in History at Oxford University and Fellow of Trinity College. He is the author of The Fall of Rome and The End of Civilisation. Read more

David Wark holds the Chair in High Energy Physics at Imperial College, London.

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Jeremy Warner is Business Editor of the Independent.

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Ibn Warraq (a pseudonym) wrote his first book, Why I am not a Muslim, in 1995 in response to the Rushdie Affair. He is the author of Defending the West: A Critique of Edward Said's Orientalism.

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David Watkin is Professor of the History of Architecture Cambridge University. He is the author of Sir John Soane and A History of Western Architecture. He is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects.

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As a student Terry was told he would fail if he continued to submit any more classical designs Read more

Daisy Waugh has written for the Daily Telegraph, the Times, and the Sunday Times. She is the author of Desperate Diary of a Country Housewife.

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Frances Weaver is Web Editor at Standpoint.

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Lord Weidenfeld is the co-founder and chairman of Weidenfeld & Nicholson. He turns 90 this month. Andrew Roberts is an historian. His latest book is The Storm of War: A New History of the Second World War. Read more

George Weigel is a Catholic theologian and the biographer of Pope John Paul II. He is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington DC, and the author of Faith, Reason, and the War Against Jihadism: A Call to Action.

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Michael Weiss is an editor at Nextbook. His work has appeared in Slate, The Weekly Standard and The New Criterion.

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Peter Whittle is director of the New Culture Forum and author of Look at Me: Celebrating the Self in Modern Britain and Private Views: Voices from the Front Line of British Culture.

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In the run-up to the Oscars, the doyen of British film criticism, the Observer's film critic Philip French, discusses the demise of cinema as an art form with Standpoint's critic Peter Whittle.

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Jamie Whyte is a popular philosopher and a former lecturer in Philosophy at Cambridge Univeristy. He is Head of Research and Publishing at Oliver Wyman, an international management consulting firm.

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David Willetts MP is the Shadow Minister for Universities and Skills. His latest book, The Pinch, is published by Atlantic Books. Frank Field MP is the former Minister for Welfare Reform and chairman of the Churches Conservation Trust. Read more

Robert Solomon Wistrich is the Neuburger Professor of European and Jewish history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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Paul Wolfowitz is a visiting scholar in foreign and defense policy studies at AEI. He has spent over three decades in public service, including serving as President of the World Bank and U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense.

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Philip Womack is a contributing editor of the Literary Review. His second novel, The Liberators, is published by Bloomsbury. Read more

David Womersley is the Thomas Warton Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford. He has edited Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, and James Boswell's The Life of Samuel Johnson.

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Chris Woodhead is the former Chief Inspector for Schools. His latest book is A Desolation of Learning: Is This the Education our Children Deserve?

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Blair Worden is a writer and historian, and is Research Professor of History at Royal Holloway College London. He is the author of many books, including Literature and Politics in Cromwellian England.

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Peregrine Worsthorne is a writer, newspaper columnist and former Editor of the Sunday Telegraph.

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Michela Wrong is a freelance writer on Africa. Her most recent book is It's Our Turn to Eat: The Story of a Kenyan Whistleblower.

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The British and Israeli novelists Howard Jacobson and A.B. Yehoshua discuss the new wave of anti-Jewish rhetoric.

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Michael Young is opinion page editor of the Lebanon Daily Star and a contributing editor at Reason magazine.

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Adam Zamoyski is a historian and writer. He is the author of many books, including Poland: A History, and is Chairman of the Princes Czartoryski Foundation.

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Adam Zeman is Professor of Cognitive and Behavioural Neurology at the Peninsular School of Medicine, and the author of A Portrait of the Brain.

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